
Trophy Dads
Overview
In Trophy Dads, sexy boys show off their hot daddies for the cameras to highlight all their um . . . special talents. First, blue-eyed beauty Finn Daniels mounts hung daddy Drew Sebastian and rides the night away. Then hot daddy Jack Dyer is on top of sexy lean uncut boy Ian Frost. Sexy Wesley Woods loves showing off his daddy bear Brian Davilla and takes his dick like a pro. Then, muscle daddy Dallas Steele's talent is using his big dick to destroy Boy Steele's hole in every possible position. Bonus: Trophy Dads stroke off auditions with uber daddies Allen Silver and Scott Reynolds.
Top Cast


Allen Silver
Allen Silver
Allen Silver


Dallas Steele
Dallas Steele
Dallas Steele


Boy Steele
Boy Steele
Boy Steele


Brian Davilla
Brian Davilla
Brian Davilla


Drew Sebastian
Drew Sebastian
Drew Sebastian


Finn Daniels
Finn Daniels
Finn Daniels


Scott Reynolds
Scott Reynolds
Scott Reynolds


Wesley Woods
Wesley Woods
Wesley Woods


Ian Frost
Ian Frost
Ian Frost


Jack Dyer
Jack Dyer
Jack Dyer
Similar Movies

A love story, a love triangle that gets soiled with blood with the arrival of a fourth character: a serial killer who collects vaginas. Lesbian couple is chased by lover betrayed in the areas of Weird. Blood and sex in the tradition of the 80's Boca do Lixo films with eschatological scenes and total cinematographic metalanguage.

Gudrun has modeled her amateur German terrorist group after the 1970s Red Army Faction (Baader-Meinhof Gang). She attempts to imitate her heroes by kidnapping the son of a wealthy industrialist and hopes to negotiate leftist demands from the father. When Gudrun’s not spouting leftist verses (including during a hilariously brilliant fuck session), she’s trying to convince her all-male gang to abandon their heterosexuality, which she believes is the result of mass delusion.

Ingo Hasselbach, whose parents were Communist Party members in East Germany during his childhood, has lived at both ends of the political seesaw. The question of how people reach a change of heart is a profound one; Hasselbach describes the external forces that led to his founding Germany's first neo-Nazi political party and the internal ones that led him away from it five years later.

















